I have spent thousands of dollars over
the past several years with Digital Juice. My studio shelves are overflowing
with DJ’s software products. I have gear bags and reflectors and lights and
C-stands and flags and greenscreens and more from them, and I like and use this
gear regularly. In fact HERE’S my list, copied from their site.
However, I think I’m done buying from
Digital Juice. I’ve gone from being a strong advocate for them to recommending
against them. The reasons are many, gradual and intertwined.
Point Number One: Devolving Content
Early on (c. 2006), Digital Juice
offered wonderful tutorials and videos about filmmaking, with several great
contributors, like Perry Jenkins, D. Eric Franks, Jeff Earley and Chuck Peters.
(These great episodes are (as of this writing) still available at
digitaljuice.com/djtv. You should check them out while they’re still
available.) Even Rick Green was worth watching. Their videos since have shifted
to tutorials for their products (nothing wrong with that) and purely
promotional pieces. (And don’t get me started on Trevor Haugen.)
Point Number Two: The Juicer
A long-time beef of mine with Digital
Juice has been over the Juicer. Nearly all their software products are designed
to work through the Juicer, and some even require it (e.g. DJ Fonts). The
Juicer has always been the weakest link in their offering. It’s slow,
cumbersome and temperamental, with an outdated interface that doesn’t comply with
convention. It could have been a wonderful, all-encompassing tool for managing
digital content, but DJ didn’t develop it to that point. Instead, they kept it
proprietary and limited. (I asked repeatedly for the ability to add my own
keywords, to no avail.)
Point Number Three: Iffy Customer
Relations
My experiences with DJ’s customer
service have been outstandingly positive and questionable. There seems to be no
middle ground. In one case, a Fresnel lens cracked on one of my DJ Helios
lights. I inquired if the standard Arri sizes were a direct replacement. DJ
replied without answering my question, but offered to replace the broken lens,
and made good on that offer. In another case, a software product (on DVD)
didn’t work due to obvious, visible defects in the DVD’s manufacture. DJ
refused to help as it had been more than 30 days since the purchase date.
Silly me for buying a multi-disc, post-production graphical
software product that I didn’t use and fully test for functionality within 30
days.
Point Number Four: Pricing Practices
Twice, I’ve purchased Digital Juice
products shortly after their introductions, at ‘early adopter’ pricing, only to
find the prices reduced about a week later. This drove me to never buy a DJ
product upon its first introduction. Though this one bit me twice I will say that DJ stepped up and granted
refunds for the difference each time. Only once I asked.
Point Number Five: Degrading Quality
over Time
I bought four C-stands when they offered
the chrome, solid version; they then changed it to black, with inferior
hardware. I bought LED lights when they offered them from Prompter People; then
they re-packaged it with a plastic housing (vs. aluminum). On the media content
side, the early products from DJ (JuiceDrops, StackTraxx, etc.) were packaged
in sturdy, rigid covers that continue to hold up well over time. They switched
to very flimsy packaging originating in India (based on the little paper flags
that fall on the floor when you open their products). I have continued to
wonder where their products are developed and produced; in supporting Digital
Juice, based in Florida, have I been sending my money overseas?
Point Number Six: I’m Stuck
DJ’s license agreement prohibits anyone
from re-selling the media products purchased from them, even if it’s the
original physical product. This is quite different than the music world, for
example, where you can buy and sell used CDs, DVDs, etc. so long as you’re not
selling illegal copies. DJ’s license agreement means I can’t sell the original
packaged product I bought from them, despite it being of no use to me any more.
They’re within their rights here, but that doesn’t mean I have to be happy
about it. Even if I have a duplicate, I can’t sell the duplicate.
Point Number Seven: Outright Thievery?
The latest product offering is “Drag
& Drop,” and is very, very similar to products offered over the past few
years by Rampant Design Tools. Scary similar. To make matters worse, when I
(and others) posted politely and factually about this on DJ's forum, they
deleted the posts. For a company to be so insecure that they can’t tolerate discussion of their competitors’ products is sad; for that company to
delete legitimate, non-critical posts comparing their competitor’s products is
community-destroying.
No one of the above points was enough to prompt me to
action. Taken together, however, they are. I’m moving on. My Digital Juice
buying days are over.